Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
orders. The Americans listened to every radio
transmission on telephone frequencies and would
soon know as much about his business as he did. He
sat silently as the limo carried him through the afternoon
traffic to the ministry.
There he called his most trusted
lieutenants to his office and issued orders.
Bring Admiral Delgado and General Alba to this
office immediately. Find and arrest Hector Sedano.
Alejo Vargas stood at the window looking at
Mono Castle and the sea beyond. Far out from shore he
could just make out the deep blue of the Gulf Stream,
which appeared as a thin blue line just under the horizon.
An overcast layer was moving in from the southeast and a
breeze was picking up.
A historic day … Fidel Castro, the towering
giant of Cuban history was dead. The end of an
era, Vargas thought, and the beginning of a new one, one
he would dominate.
Despite the timing surprise, Vargas really had
no choice: he was going to have to go forward with his plan.
He had concluded a month or so ago that the only
course open to him upon the death of Castro was to create
a situation that would induce the Cuban people to rally around
him. He would need boldness and a fierce resolve
if he were to have a chance of success, but he was just the
man to risk everything on one roll of the dice. After
he personally loaded them.
Colonel Santana brought an American
artillery shell to Havana yesterday, one removed
Nuestra Senora de Coldn.
The thing was in the basement of the ministry now, under armed
guard. The Cuban leadership had known for years that
the Americans had CBW weapons stored at
Guantanamo. Now the Americans were removing the
things, but too late! Thanks to El Gato,
Vargas had one he could show the world. Soon he
hoped to have a great many more.
Alejo Vargas took a deep breath, stretched
mightily, helped himself to a’cigar. He lit it,
inhaled the smoke, and blew it out through his nose. Then
he laughed.
“I want a little house with a garden. Every day food
to eat. Children. A doctor to make them well when they
get sick. A man who loves me. Is that so
much?”
Dora’s mouth was so dry she didn’t
enunciate her words clearly, but Ocho knew what
she meant. They lay head to head under the awning in the
shade as the
Angel del Mar
pitched and rolled endlessly in the long sea swells.
Surrounded by a universe of water they couldn’t
drink, the twenty-six humans aboard the boat were
tortured by thirst and baked by the sun. Many
had bad sunburns now, raw places where the skin
had blistered and peeled off, leaving oozing sores.
The old fisherman dipped buckets of water from the
sea and poured salt water over the burns. He
gently poured sea water on the small children, who had
long ago ceased crying. Perhaps the water would be
absorbed by their dehydrated tissues. If not, it
would at least help keep them cool, ease their
suffering somewhat.
Near Dora a woman was repeating the Rosary,
over and over, mumbling it. Now and then another
woman joined in for a few minutes, then fell
silent until the spirit moved her again.
It seemed as if everyone left alive had lost
someone to the sea that first night. The cries and grief
were almost more than people could bear when they realized who had
been lost, and that they were gone forever. Mothers cried,
daughters were so distraught they shook, the hopelessness
hit everyone like a hammer. The mother of the captain, who
saw him dead, shot hi the back, could neither move
nor speak. As Dora talked, Ocho watched the
woman, who sat
now at the foot of the mainmast, holding on to it with one
hand and a daughter or daughter-in-law with the other.
Every now and then Ocho sat or stood and
searched the horizon. Nothing. Not a boat, not land,
not a ship. Nothing.
Oh, three airplanes had gone over, two jets
way up high making contrails and a twin-engine
plane perhaps two miles up mat had crossed the
sky straight as a string, without the slightest waver as
it passed within a half mile
of Angel del Mar,
rolling her guts out in die swells.
To see the airplanes, with their people riding inside,
safe, full of food and drink, on their way from
someplace to somewhere else, while we poor
creatures are trapped here on this miserable boat,
condemned to die slowly of thirst and exposure…
Surely the boat would be found soon… by somebody!
Anybody! How can the Americans not see us?
How?
Do they see us and not care?
Ocho was standing, watching for other ships and listening
to Dora talk of the house she wanted, with the flowers
by the door, when he realized that the dark place he
could see to the west was a rain squall.
“Rainea”…he whispered.
“Rain.”
He shouted the word, pointed.
The squall was upon them before anyone could muster the
energy to do anything. The people stood with their mourns open
as raindrops pounded them and soaked their clothes and
ran off the awning and along the deck, to disappear into the
scuppers.
“The awning! Quickly. Make a container from the awning
to trap the water!”
Ocho untied one corner with fingers that were all
thumbs, the old fisherman did another comer, and they
held the corners up, trapping water.
They had a few gallons when the rain ceased
falling.
Several of the men tried to lean over, drink from the
awning.
“No. Children first.”
Ocho managed to catch one man by the back of the neck
and throw him to the deck.
“Children first.”
One by one the children were allowed to drink all they could
hold. Then the women.
Several of the men got a swallow or two each,
then the water was gone.
Ocho sat down, wiped the sweat and water from his
hair and sucked it from his fingers. The only water he
had gotten had been from holding his mourn
open.
Dora had drunk her fill. Now she lay on
the deck with her eyes closed.
Diego Coca had even gotten a swallow.
He looked about with venomous eyes, then lay down
beside his daughter.
“We must rig the awning so that it will catch water
if die rain comes againea”…Ocho said to the old
fisherman.
They worked at it, cut a hole in the low place
in the canvas and put a five-gallon bucket under
die hole.
If it will just rain again,
Ocho thought, studying the clouds.
Please God, hear our prayer.
“Why are you here, on this boat”…”…the old fisherman
asked Ocho, who stared at him in surprise.
“Why are you here”…”…the fisherman repeated. “You
aren’t tike us.”
Ocho looked around at his fellow sufferers, unable
to fathom the old man’s meaning.
“These people are all losersea”…the old man said,
“including me. We came looking for something we will
never find. Why are you with us?”
“It’s time for someone to relieve Lopez
on the pump. I will do it for a while, then you
relieve me, old man.”
“We are going to die soon, I thinkea”…the old
man said.
Ocho hissed, “There are children listening. Watch your
mouth.”
“When we can pump no more we will swim. Then we will
die. One by one people will drown, or sharks will come.”
%
“Look for a shipea”…Ocho said harshly, and went below.
Sharks! The old windbag, scaring the children like that
Of course sharks were a possibility. Blood or
people thrashing about in the water would attract them, or so
he had always heard. Sharks would rip people apart, pull
them under.
He pumped for a bit over twenty minutes, then
took a break. The water came in fast. After
five minutes he began pumping again. Another
twenty-one minutes of vigorous effort was required
to empty the bilge.
The water was coming in faster than it did yesterday.
Pumping the handle manually seemed to require more
effort too, though he knew he just had less energy.
Pump, pump, pump, take a brief rest in the
stinky bilge, then pump again….
The more tired he grew the more hopeless he felt.
All of them were doomed. Dora, the baby growing within
her, the baby that he had put in her womb …
It was his fault. If he had been man enough to say
no, to not surrender to lust, all these people would still be in
Cuba, they would have a future to look forward to, not
watery death. All the people who had been swept to their
death would still be alive.
Alive!
He had no idea of the horrible things he was setting
in motion when he opened her dress, felt the
ripeness of her body, felt the heat of her.
The guilt weighed on him, made it hard to breathe.
He must do what he could to save them all. That was the
only honorable choice open to him. Save as many as
possible and maybe God would forgive him.
Maybe then he could forgive himself….
And he shouldn’t give up hope yet. As he worked
the pump handle he scolded himself for being so
negative, for not having faith in God, in His
plan for the twenty-six human beings still alive on
Angel del Mar.
Soon a ship would come. The sailors would see the
boat and rescue them. Give them cool, clean
water, all they
could drink; and food. Let each of them eat their
fill. Soon it would come. Any minute now.
He pumped and pumped, sweat burned his eyes and
dripped from his nose, though not so much as he sweated
yesterday. He was very dehydrated. The salt had
built up in his armpits, his groin, and it cut him.
With his free hand he scratched, which only made the
burning worse.
Any minute now a ship will come over the horizon.
Soon…
Maximo Sedano took a taxi from the Zurich
airport to an excellent hotel in the heart of the
financial district where he had stayed on six or
eight previous visits. The hotel was old,
solid, substantial, almost banklike, yet it was
not the primo hotel. This was the last time he stayed
here, he told himself. Eduardo Jos6 Lopez would
stay at the best hotel in town because by God he could
afford it. And because the staff over there had never seen
him as Maximo Sedano.
He would have- to make many adjustments, avoid
photographs, avoid places where prominent
Cubans might see him, like the heart of Madrid
or London or Paris. Of course, if Vargas
was assassinated in the turmoil following
Fidel’s death, he could relax his vigilance
somewhat. Vargas was a bloodhound, a humorless
man with a profound capacity for revenge. Still, if
Vargas came out on top after the succession struggle
in Havana, he would have many things on bis mind, and a
missing ex-finance minister would of necessity be far
down on the list.
Maximo would take his chances. He was hi
Europe, the money was hi the banks just down the
street, the loud and clear call of destiny was ringing
hi bis ears.
He was sipping a drink and thinking about where he
might go for dinner when he heard a knock on the
door.
“Yes?”
“Delivery.”
“I ordered nothing- There has been a
mistake.”
“For the Honorable Maximo Sedano.”
Curious, he opened the door.
The man standing in the hallway was European, with
thinning hair and bulging muscles and a chiseled chin.
And he was holding a pistol in his right hand, one
pointed precisely at Maximo’s solar
plexus.
The man backed Maximo into the room and closed the
door.
“Your passport, please”…”…A German accent.
“I have little money. Take it and go.”
“Sit.”…He gestured toward a chair by the bed with his
pistol. Maximo obeyed, thankfully. His knees
were turning to jelly and he had a powerful urge
to urinate.
“Now the passport.”
Maximo took the diplomatic passport from his
inside pocket and passed it ‘acr. Taking care
to keep the pistol well away from Maximo and still
pointed at his middle, the man reached for the passport
with his left hand.
He glanced at the photo and name, grinned, and
tossed the passport on the bed. The man took a
seat.
“You look white as a sheet, man. Are you going
to pass out?”
He felt dizzy, light-headed. He put his hand
to his forehead, which felt clammy.
“Loosen your tieea”…the German ordered,
“unbutton your collar button, then put your head
between your knees.”
Maximo obeyed.
“Don’t breathe so fast. Get a grip on yourself.
If you aren’t careful you’ll hyperventilate and
pass out.”
Maximo concentrated on breathing slowly. After a
few seconds he felt better. Finally he
straightened up. The pistol was nowhere in sight.